Spouses
often mirror each other's health habits
New Haven,
Conn.—If one spouse exercises, quits smoking, stops drinking alcohol,
receives a flu shot, or undergoes a cholesterol screening, the other spouse
is more likely to do the same, according to a new study in Health Services
Research.
“We found
that when one spouse improves his or her health
behavior,
the other spouse was likely to do so as well,” said co-author Jody Sindelar,
health economist and public health professor in the Yale School of Public
Health. “This was consistent across all the behaviors analyzed and was
similar among both males and females.”
Using
longitudinal data on 6,072 individuals and their spouses from the Health and
Retirement Study, the researchers found the changes in spouses’ health
habits were most apparent in such behavior as smoking and drinking, which is
often spurred by outside cues, and in patient-directed preventive behavior,
such as getting a flu shot.
For
example, smokers were more than five times more likely to quit smoking if
their spouse quit, when controlling for other relevant factors. Similarly,
spouses were five times more likely to quit drinking alchol if their partner
didn’t drink. The changes were less apparent in clinician-directed
preventive behavior, such as obtaining cholesterol screening.
Sindelar
and co-author Tracy Falba, M.D., visiting assistant professor at Duke
University's Center for Health Policy, Law and Management, said health
habits and use of preventive services should be viewed in the context of a
family.
They said
attempts to change behavior may be enhanced, or thwarted, by the behavior of
family members, especially spouses. For this reason, they said, intervention
programs should include tips about how to get the other spouse involved in
exercise or help reduce tobacco cues.
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The study
was funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the National Institute
on Aging.